Moving On From Cleora, How About Cléophée?

Well, I've gotten bad responses from Cleora, so I guess I should just move on and leave it as a GP. I love Cleo as a nn, and someone suggested Cléophée. Cleo-fay. I love the sound. I'd probably drop the accent on the first e, as I don't live in France. What do you think? Usable? I grew up with a hard to pronounce name, and hated it. But Cléophée is so pretty. I think I could get over it. What do you think? Any other Cleo names you like better?
If you think it is usable, should I spell it Cléophée, Cleophée, Cleophee? Something more phonetic?
I really love Cleo, but not on its own. Cleo just feels too short (and it was a dog on the TV show Clifford the Big Red Dog when I was a kid). I'm really struggling to find a name I could use it for. I've gotten Calliope, but I feel like it is a big jump. Cleopatra is a 1 woman name. Cleome, Cleone, Cleona? Nothing feels right. Lost & confused. Need some convincing on which Cleo name is best. So if no to Cléophée, tell me your favorite Cleo nn name.
Thanks!
HTB

I think Cléophée is a lovely name, but spelled like this I'd pronounce it Clay-oh-fay, if it was spelled Cleophée, I'd pronounce it Clee-oh-fay (which I prefer), and I think most people would do the same. But I'm just using my rather limited knowledge of French pronunciations to base this on. It is a really beautiful name, I'd use it.

@lesliemarion- I understand what you are saying. It is just too weird for real use, too grand and strange looking. I thought about it last night, being named Cléophée would not be so great. Spelling/pronunciation would be a nightmare. But I do love the sound. Cleo just feels too short/nicknamey to me. I'll have to think about it, let it grow on me a bit.
@myosotis- I'm glad someone other than myself loves the sound of it.

SO, if Cleophée is a dud/not usable, is Cleone (or Cleonie?) or Cleona better? Or Cleome? Which is best?